Finding the Exit: Ideology and Aperture in Graciliano Ramos

Finding the Exit: Ideology and Aperture in Graciliano Ramos

Finding the Exit: Ideology and Aperture in Graciliano Ramos Holly Jackson University of California at Berkeley Abstract: What ideological structures produce the linguistically austere worlds of Graciliano Ramos’s novels? What are the effects of reading outside of these seemingly all-consuming structures? These questions motivate this article’s discussion of two novels: São Bernardo and Vidas secas. In recuperating the complexity of expression in Graciliano’s writing, the article explores distinct modes of language as resistance to stereotypes about Brazilian Northeasterners—stereotypes that are often reproduced in literary criticism. The article considers this resistance both within language, in misuse (circularity, lying, [mis]appropriation, the breakdown of narrative time), and to language, in the textual presence of silence. Keywords: São Bernardo, Vidas secas, Brazilian Regionalism, silence, narrative time The theme of futility is a current in much of the critical work on Graciliano Ramos’s writing. Graciliano’s works are “uma sátira violenta e um panfleto furioso contra a humanidade” (Lins 132); “uma série de experiências de humi- lhação, de degradação, físicas, morais ou psicológicas” (Casais Monteiro 166); “[um] sistema literário pessimista” where all humans “obedecem a uma fata- lidade cega e má … que os leva a caminhos pré-traçados” (Candido, “Ficção” 53). Although characters may attempt to transform their surroundings, “sabem que todo é inútil” (Sarmento Lima 15). Obedience to broad power structures that predetermine subjectivities subsumes individual realities: the inhabit- 13 (2015): 121-144 | © 2015 by the American Portuguese Studies Association Studies Portuguese the American 13 (2015): 121-144 | © 2015 by ants of these worlds “rodam num âmbito exíguo, sem saída nem variedade” (Candido, “Os bichos” 87). ellipsis 121 What ideological structures create these worlds? Is it possible to identify an “outside” to these worlds within the text? If so, what are the effects of per- forming such a reading? These questions motivate this article, in which I exam- ine how Graciliano represents ideology and its outside in two of his novels: São Bernardo (1934) and Vidas secas (1938). Graciliano himself poses the question of ideology and freedom in terms of the problematics of language in his autobiographical Memórias do cárcere: “Liberdade completa ninguém desfruta: começamos oprimidos pela sintaxe e acabamos às voltas com a Delegacia de Ordem Política e Social, mas, nos estrei- tos limites a que nos coagem a gramática e a lei, ainda nos podemos mexer” (34, italics mine). What emerges from this quote is that for Graciliano, language is at once the instrument of and the means of resistance to ideology. In this article, I argue that both São Bernardo and Vidas secas channel discourses that are alternative to that of hegemonic language and consequently resistant to the imposition of ideology. One of these discourses is silence—a presence, rather than an absence, in the text. These novels represent worlds in which ideological apparatuses seem inevitable; however, the novels disprove the inexorability of ideologically determined existence. Through close readings of the texts, I first identify the ideological apparatuses at work in each novel, calling attention to the conflation and equation of ideology, language and time. In the next section of the paper, I identify possible apertures in these appa- ratuses, including parallel scenes of existential crisis. I conclude that in their resistance to language and in their openness to alternative discourses, these novels belie the notion of ideologically closed—futile—worlds; further, this internal resistance with regard to language calls into question the critical tra- dition that exists around the so-called Regionalist literature of Brazil’s North- east. Graciliano’s novels, traditionally held to be part of the Regionalist canon, refuse to impose or perpetuate certain identities and languages—that is, cer- tain ideologies—on the region and its inhabitants, and therein call for a critical approach to Northeastern Regionalism that acknowledges the complexity of its expressive modes. 122 ellipsis 13 Closed Worlds In São Bernardo, a suffocating economic system permits no outside: “Dinheiro é dinheiro,” Paulo Honório advises (19). From this tautology unfold many of the novel’s implications, first among them the single-mindedness of Paulo Honório’s motivations with regard to acquisition. Material possession is Paulo Honório’s paradigm and his language. To this effect, his monetary axiom also suggests that money is the only thing that is truly itself; everything else under- goes a translation into an economic language. Economic power constitutes a relentless narrative lens focalized through the voice of Paulo Honório. His language constantly sublimates the social to the economic. Thus, the idea of Paulo Honório’s memoir is simultaneous with the idea of its selling potential: “já via os volumes expostos, um milheiro vendido” (7); fame is a commodity he purchases: “Costa Brito também publicou uma nota na Gazeta, elogiando-me…. Em conseqüencia mordeu-me, cem mil-réis” (42-43); justice is an economic luxury: “Como a justiça era cara, não foram à justiça” (40); religion is an economic reckoning: “Admito Deus, pagador celeste dos meus trabalhadores, mal remunerados cá na terra, e admito o diabo, futuro carrasco do ladrão que me furtou uma vaca de raça” (131); holidays hinder eco- nomic gain: “Aqui nos dias santos surgem viagens, doenças e outros pretextos para o trabalhador ganzear. O domingo é perdido, o sábado também se perde, por causa da feira, a semana tem apenas cinco dias, que a Igreja ainda reduz. O resultado é a paga encolher” (56); birth is a compensation: “Madalena estava prenhe…. Uma compensação” (113); and death is an affront to productivity: “Para diminuir a mortalidade e aumentar a produção, proibi a aguardente” (38-39); “[n]ão obstante ele ter morrido, acho bom que vá trabalhar” (102-03). Paulo Honório writes himself into this discourse of economic potenti- ality, condensing his present and past into a trajectory of acquisition, under- standing marriage and children as the procurement of an heir, and couching his marriage proposal and reconciliation in terms of job offers (15; 59; 88-89, 106). Paulo Honório both subordinates others to and is himself an interpellated subject of this ideology. While other characters in the novel may be “meras modalidades do narrador,” as Antonio Candido has put it, “Paulo Honório, por sua vez, é modalidade duma força que o transcende e em função da qual Holly Jackson 123 vive: o sentimento de propriedade” (“Ficção” 24). According to João Pereira Pinto, Paulo Honório “não é livre…. Comporta-se dentro da ideologia domi- nante, sem ter consciência desse fato” (133). This drive for property consumes Paulo Honório as he consumes others. After his wife commits suicide and the property declines, he reflects: “nem sequer me resta a ilusão de ter realizado obra proveitosa. O jardim, a horta, o pomar—abandonados; os marrecos de Pequim—mortos; o algodão, a mamona—secando. E as cercas dos vizinhos, inimigos ferozes, avançam” (181). In the same way that Paulo Honório’s power dissolves back into the ide- ological apparatus of possession, one imagines a bastardization of his name, yet another sublimation to the economic—from the strongman implications of “Honório,” a slippage to honorários, legal fees. Possession is not a permanent condition that endows the “personalidade forte” of Paulo Honório with indi- viduality (Candido, “Ficção” 28); rather, it is an ideological drive to which he is subjected and of which his downfall is merely a reaffirmation. If in São Ber- nardo the drive for possession is all-consuming, in Vidas secas it is deprivation that is inescapable. As in São Bernardo, this reality exists in language. In Vidas secas, Fabiano and his family are retirantes, subjects of the drought cycle. As a character, Fabiano evokes Os Sertões, “onde Euclides da Cunha des- creve a retidão impensada e singela do campeiro nordestino” (Candido “Ficção” 45). Similar to Euclides’ study of sertanejos, whose physicality conjures an image of “Hércules-Quasímodo” (Cunha 48), Graciliano’s descriptions of Fabiano sug- gest a predetermined identity: “Êsses movimentos eram inúteis, mas o vaqueiro, o pai do vaqueiro, o avô e outros antepassados mais antigos haviam-se acostu- mado a percorrer veredas, afastando o mato com as mãos” (21-22). The majority of the novel is told in the free indirect discourse of Fabi- ano; within this interiority is revealed the inculcating effect of the social order. Fabiano’s internalization of the status quo results in him repressing any ide- ation of his own agency. Despite his development of a theory of the injus- tice of the social order over the course of the novel, Fabiano never utters this aloud and instead accepts his situation as fate: “Tinha obrigação de trabalhar para os outros, naturalmente, conhecia o seu lugar…. Era sina. O pai vivera assim, o avô também…. Comformava-se, não pretendia mais nada” (143). 124 ellipsis 13 The invocation of his bloodline here echoes his previous mention of his ances- tors with regard to posture; these passages establish a rhetoric of social deter- minism that would naturalize the social hierarchy to which Fabiano is subject. Fabiano’s laconism illustrates not the biological limits that this deterministic rhetoric would ascribe to him, but the process by which this ideological appa- ratus reproduces itself:

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